“It is the Spirit who gives life; the flesh profits nothing. The words that I speak to you are spirit, and they
are life.” (John 6:63)
Two things need to be observed. One, “spirit” in the Bible is not synonymous with “metaphor”—unless you want to
relegate God, angels, and/or God’s gracious spiritual enlightenment to the realm of metaphor.
It is not "synonymous with", meaning that "spirit [itself] IS symbol", but physical things being metaphors of spiriaul realities is "spiritual meaning". Just like all OT types. Taking it "literally" when it doesn't make any sense, is "carnally" (and claiming "well, it is just supernatural" again, is a copout, in that context).
Two, when Christ said
that “the flesh profits nothing”, He wasn’t referring to His own physical flesh, or else He’d be saying in essence that
He was giving His flesh for the life of the world but such would ultimately be a profitless, useless endeavor. No, in
this instance Christ is juxtaposing “flesh” in the sense of carnality (not ‘physicality’) verses spirit in the sense of
grace filled (not ‘immaterial’ or ‘metaphorical’), as this juxtaposition occurs frequently in the New Testament.
Here are just two examples:
“The spirit is indeed willing but the flesh is weak.” (Matthew 26:41)
“…who do not walk according to the flesh but according to the Spirit.” (Romans 8:1)
I never used "the flesh profits nothing" argument, so that doesn't pertain to me. I know that "flesh" in that case is
not literal anyway (it is our unfallen nature, or the Jews trusting in their physical heritage), so I don't use it in
this argument about flesh being "literal".
But you have made comments in the past which seemed to identify the mere possibility of using matter for
spiritual purposes to the “weak and beggarly elements” that Paul associated with the practices of the OLD Covenant—as
if what made the Old practices “weak and beggarly” was the mere fact that they were physical and not purely spiritual,
rather than that fact of being “weak and beggarly” because they were only types and shadows of the reality to come, and that the animal sacrifices of the Old Covenant couldn’t actually take away sins (Hebrews 10:4). If you really meant that by those comments, then your views (in that respect) are indeed more in line with Gnosticism. If I misunderstood, then perhaps you can give me another reason why you think the mere use of physical objects to confer spiritual benefits is “weak and beggarly”.
I think you still misunderstand what I said, or at least the context of it. I think that was more in answering your or someone else's justification of Catholic practice because the OT did it. Like the cherubim, the brass serpent, etc. Either the Eucharist is just like those things, and it is then another "weak and beggarly elelemt", or it is different (as you are claiming), and really stands on its own merit, and should not be justified based on those other things.
So how do you explain the Hypostatic Union? I’m not talking about merely reciting the Definition of Chalcedon, I want
you to explain to me how it is that the One Divine Person can assume complete humanity—body, soul, mind, will—so as to
have two unconfused natures yet eternally remain one subject. I’m not sure your ‘explanation’ will be anymore
informative regarding the “how” of the Hypostatic Union than anyone else’s “how” of the Real Presence.
You just
explained it the way I and most would explain it, even though none understands "how". Yet again, with the Real
presence, you can't even really explain it in any consistent fashion. It is a change, but it's not transubstantiation.
It indwells unchanged bread and wine; no; actual flesh and blood that looks like bread and wine takes the place of the
bread and wine. (this is at least what Agnus Dei last implied).
But Christ is Personally present in the giving of His body and blood in the bread and wine of Holy
Communion.
But I haven’t said that Christ is not Personally present. In fact I mentioned in an earlier post how Christ can be Personally present in the giving of His body and blood in the bread and wine in a way that was distinct to the Holy Spirit’s Personal presence in the Church.
Of course! But He's in us!
It’s funny how in a previous thread you began by claiming that God doesn’t indwell objects (“things”, I believe
was the word you used), and then in the face of Biblical counter-evidence you gradually backed off into a “not other
objects present in objects” defense.
Simply restating what I have said, when I see how it is mistake for
something else. "not other object in objects" is what I originally meant, but I did not know the best way to express it
until your counterpoint. It is not "backing off".
Yet, you haven’t given me one logically necessary reason why Christ couldn’t give His Personal body and blood
to us in the empirical forms of bread and wine.
Because He gave us His flesh and blood on the Cross, and said
to use the bread and wine in "reMEMbrance" of Me" (ie.e His giving us His flesh and blood on the cross)!
And you still haven’t responded the point I made that God can be present in His Church in more than one way. That the Holy Spirit is Personally in the Church does not rule out the Christ can be Personally present in another way in the giving of His Body and Blood to us during Holy Communion.
Yet God (Christ) Himself is present in the bread and the wine. Just because He calls the bread “His Body” and
the wine “His blood” doesn’t logically mean He Himself is Personally absent from those objects.
Also, you keep getting hung up on the Real Presence in the Eucharist being some ‘new kind of “supernatural”’, ignoring
the fact that the Incarnation itself was, to the Jews of that day, a ‘new kind of “supernatural”’. In the past, God
would temporarily dwell in objects like clouds in locales such as temples, but with Christ God became hypostatically
joined to humanity—not to a pre-existing man—as Jesus Christ in a way totally unique compared to anything that ever
came before or would ever come afterwards. It then could be said that the flesh and blood of Jesus was uniquely GOD’s
flesh and blood, something He didn’t have previously. In other words, the Jews would rightfully consider this (the
Incarnation) to be ‘foreign’ to the way God acted or existed in the OT. And this same flesh and blood is now
permanently and PERSONALLY HIS, so if He decides to give this in the bread and wine, He isn’t giving mere “objects in
other objects”, but something now Personally inseparable from HIMSELF.
The bottom line is you accuse me of “making up a new kind of ‘supernatural’” and doing something that is “totally
foreign to the acts of God” in the Bible, but the Jews could accuse both of us of doing the same thing regarding the
Incarnation. But if God can do something new and unique in the Incarnation, He certainly can do something new and
unique by giving His Incarnate flesh and blood in the forms of bread and wine.
Like the last issue, it is a matter of finding the best way to phrase things. Especially with me having limited time,
and being in a rush, and you do atomize my posts, so it is hard to think but so much at times.
What I am trying to say you're doing, is using "supermatural" to try to justify something you are arguing that is in
question. IT is easy to slap "it's supernatural" on anything; such as people's answer to your claim as to how to know
all the truth, with "God tells us". So there are hundreds of sects of people claiming that; how do you know what God is
telling anyone? Yet, that appeal to the supernatural makes people feel like they have refuted the skeptics reason, and
answered the questioner's questions. So likewise, you have a claim that something is "happening" to bread and wine, but
it is not a transubstantiation; you admit there is no empirical change, so what is it? "Well; it's a supernatural
change; see, there, our Church is right". Sorry; but you have not proven anything. You have just made a hypothesis and
tossed it up into the air as "just is" because it's "supernatural". That just doesn't prove anything, and it is the
final dodging of the initial issue of whether that is really a necessary interpretation of the scriptures in question
in the first place. "This is the true interpretation because those scriptures cannot be metaphorical, and they really
are eating flesh and blood, but it doesn't look like flesh and blood because it is just supernatural". That is a
tautology.